the Steven P.J. Wood Senior Fellow and Vice President for Research and Publications

1.Claims of "Unilateral" U.S. Action Exasperate Brit Hume
Sixteen of 19 NATO nations and 34 countries in all back the U.S. policy toward Iraq, but on Fox News Sunday, much to the consternation of Brit Hume, the NPR duo of Mara Liasson and Juan Williams kept referring to the U.S. going it "alone," "isolating itself" and how "the United States is basically acting in a unilateral fashion." To that last claim by Williams, an exasperated Hume exclaimed: "It's not unilateral when it's 16 to 3! Can't you count?"

2. Nets Marvel at "Diverse" Marchers, "Elderly" to "Soccer Moms"
Covering Saturday's anti-liberation of Iraq marches, the networks ignored the organizing roles and participation of far-left proto-communist groups and people and, instead, portrayed participants as a "diverse coss-section" of average people. ABC, CBS and NBC ran multiple stories and quoted only average looking people. CNN's Maria Hinojosa trumpeted: "Like New York, it's an extraordinarily diverse crowd. I have seen elderly men and women with mink coats carrying their posters..." CNN anchor Carol Lin marveled at "the diversity out there, I mean, you had soccer moms out there, professional people..."

3.NY Times Celebrates Rally: "Throwing a Party With a Purpose"
The New York Times on Sunday matched the tone of the networks. "Wide Range of Ages, Races and Parties Unite on Iraq," proclaimed the February 16 headline over a series of dispatches from protest cities. The Times headlined the summary from Paris: "Throwing a Party With a Purpose." Over the dispatch from Rome: "A Festive Tone, But Somber Ideas."

4.CBS and CNN Avoid Labeling a Far-Left Think Tank
The Institute for Policy Studies is a far-left, Washington, DC-based outfit, but on Friday morning its Iraq expert went unlabeled by both CBS and CNN in segment promoting the upcoming marches against the liberation of Iraq. CNN reporter Maria Hinojosa's question to Susan Sarandon: "Why, as an American citizen, do you think it's important to stand out and step up now?"

5. Laudatory Reagan Profile, But Couric Relays a Liberal
Canard
In the midst of a generally laudatory review of former President Reagan's tenure in office, on Monday's Today Katie Couric passed along the standard liberal canard about how Reagan's tax cuts and military spending caused the deficit to grow: "During his tenure the economy improved but budget deficits grew as he cut taxes and increased defense spending."

6. Keith Olbermann: FNC Staff Should Feel Humiliated
A nice shot at the Fox News Channel from Keith Olbermann, the former MSNBC host who has filled in for Paul Harvey on ABC Radio and is set to co-host the 2004 summer Olympics on NBC. Monday on MSNBC he remarked, in a discussion about reality TV: "I enjoy as much as the next guy the experience of watching somebody humiliate himself or herself on television without really realizing it. I mean, that's why we have the Fox News Channel."

Sixteen of 19 NATO nations and 34 countries in all back the U.S. policy toward Iraq, but on Fox News Sunday, much to the consternation of Brit Hume, the NPR duo of Mara Liasson and Juan Williams kept referring to the U.S. going it "alone," "isolating itself" and how "the United States is basically acting in a unilateral fashion." To that last claim by Williams, an exasperated Hume retorted: "It's not unilateral when it's 16 to 3! Can't you count?"

During the panel portion of the February 16 program, NPR political reporter Mara Liasson warning about the U.S. going it 'alone' on Iraq: "I think the reason why it's important to try to get the entire international community singing from the same page on Iraq is not necessarily for American public opinion, because even though I agree the polls show now that the American public would rather have international support, I think that if America went it alone, there would be public support for that. I don't think that the U.S. would turn against the Bush administration.
But I think that it's important for what happens the day after. I think this stuff matters. Even though the administration has made it very clear it doesn't necessarily care about world opinion, it's going to do this on its own with the coalition of the willing-"
Hume interjected: "He does care about world opinion, Mara and this idea of -- people keep talking about going it alone. At last count, there were 34 nations prepared to help in this."
Liaison: "Hold on, Brit, I'm talking about without the United Nations Security Council. Yes, we're always going to have a coalition of the willing..."

Minutes later Williams worried about the U.S. "isolating itself." The former NPR talk show host and current commentator charged: "But look at what's happening to NATO, look at what's happening at the UN. The United States is in essence, then, isolating itself. We are building tremendous rifts in these institutions."
A befuddled Hume wondered: "How can we be isolating ourselves when it's 16 to 3 in NATO for what we want to do?"

Back from an ad break, Williams stood up for France, Germany and Belgium: "What they are saying, Brit, and I hope everyone hears this clearly, I mean, they're saying they have a point to make, they do not feel that the United States is acting in a way that is sufficiently based, that would allow them to feel good about this military action-"
Hume: "It's not about feeling good."
Williams: "-that the United States is basically acting in a unilateral fashion."
An irritated Hume exclaimed: "It's not unilateral when it's 16 to 3! Can't you count?"

Just as they did last month with the anti-war "peace" rally in Washington, DC and San Francisco, in covering Saturday's anti-liberation of Iraq protest marches around the world, the networks ignored the organizing roles and participation of far-left proto-communist and America-hating groups and people and, instead, portrayed participants as a "diverse coss-section" of average people.

The ABC, CBS and NBC newscasts on Saturday night all led with multiple stories on the protests and all featured soundbites from very average looking people along the march routes while CNN's Maria Hinojosa trumpeted: "Like New York, it's an extraordinarily diverse crowd. I have seen elderly men and women with mink coats carrying their posters. I have also seen children with their parents coming from public schools..."

All day CNN featured lengthy segments under the banner of "Voices of Dissent." CNN anchor Carol Lin marveled at "the diversity out there, I mean, you had soccer moms out there, professional people, people who have never really participated in...political rallies." From Berlin, reporter Matthew Chance insisted the marchers were not "radicals" but "bankers, they're office clerks, they're just normal people..."

ABC's World News Tonight showcased a "teacher" and a "pediatrician" in New York City before Hilary Brown in London admired how the protest "cuts right across political and social lines."

On the CBS Evening News, Jim Acosta zeroes in on how "Charles Richardson and his wife held posters bearing the picture of a son, who is now awaiting war in the Persian Gulf." Anchor Russ Mitchell celebrated "Code Pink: Women for Peace," a bunch of far-leftists who recently traveled to Iraq to aid Saddam Hussein's cause. CBS showed a clip of one of the women kissing French Foreign Minister Dominique de
Villepin.

Over on the NBC Nightly News, Pat Dawson highlighted "Andrew and Denise Johnson" who "drove from Danvers, Massachusetts, to New York City, their first time at an anti-war rally." Leading into a clip from a man with a wife and two pre-teen daughters at his side, Dawson relayed: "Protest organizers argued the real message of today's rallies is that a silent majority of Americans is uneasy with the prospect of war, like the Green family of Great Neck, New York. To them, the President's case against Saddam Hussein remains unconvincing."

Despite the massive coverage, John McKenzie concluded his ABC story by passing along a plea: "So many voices, filling the streets, struggling to be heard."

Only FNC's Jennifer Eccleston, checking in from Paris on the Fox Report, hinted that in addition to the "cross-section" of French society the march in Paris brought out communists: "We saw a cross-section of society at the Paris protests, young, old and families, many of them supporting a socialist and communist parties of France."

Now, some more detail about the ABC, CBS, NBC and CNN coverage on Saturday, February 15:

-- ABC's World News Tonight/Saturday. Anchor Terry Moran glowingly opened the broadcast: "Good evening. I'm Terry Moran. It's no secret there is a lot of opposition to the Bush Administration's plans for war in Iraq. Today, around the world, we got a sense of the sheer scale and intensity of that opposition. Millions of people from New York to London to Rome and in scores of other cities, took to the streets to protest against any U.S.-led invasion against Iraq. It was an enormous display of anti-war and in some cases, anti-American sentiment. We start tonight with Hilary Brown in London, where one of the largest rallies took place."

Brown's piece showcased how "some had never marched before," and she concluded: "This anti-war demonstration here in Hyde Park is being described as one of the biggest demonstrations in British history. It cuts right across political and social lines. The question is whether this will be enough to change the position of the country's Prime Minister. Hilary Brown, ABC News, London."

Next, John McKenzie checked in from New York City where he carried a soundbite from a teacher who said he's "ashamed" of the U.S. government, and then a female pediatrician.

"There are many here today who speak with a sense of urgency and frustration," McKenzie asserted before a clip of another protester and from South Africa's Desmond Tutu. McKenzie concluded: "So many voices, filling the streets, struggling to be heard. John McKenzie, ABC News, New York."

McKenzie's worry about "the struggle to be heard" came about four-and-a-half minutes into ABC's coverage of those very protests.

-- CBS Evening News. Anchor Russ Mitchell teased the show: "Calls for peace: Hundreds of thousands demonstrate in New York and dozens of other American cities. Millions of voices are raised against an Iraq war in Britain and around the world."

Mitchell began: "Streets and parks in cities across the U.S. and the world were filled with demonstrators today protesting a possible U.S.-led war against Iraq. Hundreds of thousands of protesters jammed New York City streets near the UN, and spread across much of Midtown Manhattan when the designated rally site could not accommodate them all. Despite some scuffles between police and demonstrators and a number of arrests, the protest was overwhelmingly peaceful.
"Although the numbers varied, the story was much the same in other cities as well, from Minneapolis and Milwaukee in the Midwest, south to New Orleans and Austin and all the way West to Seattle and Los Angeles. All told, anti-war demonstrations took place in at least 150 American cities from coast to coast. So huge was the demonstration in New York that protesters were still dispersing well after nightfall. Jim Acosta has been spending the day on the city's streets."

Acosta maintained that "organizers say the rally drew 500,000 people. There were certainly several hundred thousand, filling as many as 40 New York blocks bearing signs that read, 'No blood for oil' and 'Get the warheads out of DC.' Charles Richardson and his wife held posters bearing the picture of a son, who is now awaiting war in the Persian Gulf."

Acosta challenged Richardson: "Some of the soldiers out there might say, you know, 'You're not doing us any good here.'
Richardson: "Well, we think the best we can do, the most supportive thing we can do for Joe and for the other soldiers out there is to get them home, to not let them be sent into battle, into a war that's unjust and unnecessary."
Acosta: "Nobel Peace Prize winner, South Africa's Bishop Desmond Tutu, urged the United Nations to give peace a chance."
Tutu shouting at the rally: "No to war!"
On a very quiet side street, Acosta asked Tutu: "And what message do you think President Bush should take from today?"
Tutu preposterously claimed: "A very big majority of Americans are saying, 'President, please step back from the precipice.'"
Acosta lamented: "Sending that message were Vietnam-era protesters like Jan Powell, who want to believe war can be prevented, but are convinced it can't."
Jan Powell: "My heart says yes, and my head says no. My head says that we're going to go to war."
Acosta: "Then there are the first-timers, like Sheldon Ginsberg, who say they've never done anything like this before."
Ginsberg: "It's time to do something. I can't just sit home and just, and watch this on TV and not be part of it. I need to be part of it."
Acosta concluded with a warning: "Despite some arrests and clashes with police, it was, for the most part, a peaceful reminder to the powerful that there is a divide over whether the nation should go to war."

CBS moved on to Europe. In London, Tom Fenton was in awe: "This may have been the biggest political rally in UK history. Perhaps as many as a million people converged on the center of London to march and denounce American plans for war. And this is Britain, America's closest ally in the campaign against Saddam Hussein. Most people here are appalled at the thought of going to war against Iraq....And protesters are not buying a link between Saddam Hussein and al-Qaeda....In fact, polls show a third of the British public thinks President Bush is a greater threat to peace than Saddam Hussein."

After noting Prime Minister Tony Blair's defense of his policy, Fenton returned to the anti-liberation of Iraq side: "And they demonstrated not just in England. People marched all over Europe, regardless of their governments' stand..."

Fenton concluded: "The Bush administration's efforts to win public support for action against Iraq may have had the unintended effect of uniting European public opinion. This is an entire continent that apparently does not want to go to war. Tom Fenton, CBS News, London."

To end the program, Russ Mitchell offered a positive profile of a bunch of far-left women: "Many of the faces were not young, but most were as excited as the college kids they once were, ready to have their voices heard again. Take this group of easy-to-spot women in pink, practiced protesters, veterans of decades of demonstrations, a small pink spot in a huge crowd marching today."
Media Benjamin of Code Pink: Women For Peace: "We are soccer moms, we are mothers, we are grandmothers. We are people who are fiercely in love with our country, the United States."
Mitchell: "They are the Code Pink: Women for Peace, a coalition of women who acknowledge they are radicals and say the name of their group is a play on the government's color-coded terror alert system....They are serious about their cause, but not afraid to mix their politics with white wine and Brie at a poster-making get-together in a posh Manhattan apartment on the eve of the demonstration."
Benjamin insisted: "We have no affection for Saddam Hussein. We would love to see the Iraqi government transformed into a democratic government that gave the rights of free association and free speech to the Iraqi people. But we think that has to happen from within the Iraqi society, that it shouldn't happen by bombs raining down on the Iraqi people."

Despite her lack of affection for Hussein, she aided his propaganda efforts. Mitchell: "Medea Benjamin is from San Francisco, but she's been traveling a lot lately. She and a dozen other Pink ladies just returned from Baghdad, where they spent 10 days touring the country, visiting schools and markets and donating blood."
Benjamin to an Iraqi woman: "What do you think will happen here if there is war?"
Iraqi woman: "Disaster. Big disaster."
Benjamin: "The Iraqis are real people."
Mitchell: "Yesterday they demonstrated outside the United Nations while the weapons inspectors were inside giving their report. One woman was arrested. And there was more excitement awaiting them. After the session, in which the French foreign minister's impassioned speech calling for more time was greeted by applause in the Security Council chamber, the pink ladies ran into him."
Women, as one kissed Dominique de Villepin outside of the UN: "Vive la France!"
The piece ended with a soundbite from Benjamin: "We are out to show the world that the American people are good, kind, loving, generous people. We're not bullies. We're not trying to impose our will on the rest of the world."

-- NBC Nightly News. Dana Lewis trumpeted: "The heart of London today paralyzed by the largest anti-war demonstration in British history. By some estimates, up to a million people walked miles carrying the same message: No war with Iraq under any circumstances, even though no one was defending Saddam Hussein."

Lewis maintained: "The message for their Prime Minister and Washington's staunchest ally, Tony Blair, 'Make tea, not war.' Many here were marching for their first time ever in any demonstration, like Barbara Pierce, whose daughter went to Baghdad a week ago to be a human shield....Blair took note of the protestor's message, but in a speech to his Labour Party he insisted that leaving Saddam in power is inhumane."

Lewis added: "Voices in the street and around the world today, a massive demonstration of just how much of the world views the threat and level of danger differently than America, and here how Washington has failed miserably to convince most of Europe about the need for force when it comes to Saddam Hussein...."

Lewis concluded with a very familiar soundbite from Jesse Jackson in London: "Give peace a chance." Lewis then wrapped up:
"On this one day, so many people in so many different parts of the world making their case for a peaceful solution to Iraq. Dana Lewis, NBC News, London."

From New York City, reporter Pat Dawson asserted: "Bundled up against the cold, protesters came by the thousands, filling block after block around the United Nations to make a single dramatic statement against going to war."

Dawson called it "a scene repeated in protests across the country, from Seattle to Milwaukee," before he ran a soundbite from a man sporting a "Fox Sports" jacket and then located the most average people to showcase: "Andrew and Denise Johnson drove from Danvers, Massachusetts, to New York City, their first time at an anti-war rally.
Andrew Johnson: "I think this administration's heading down the wrong road."
Dawson: "The sentiment voiced so loudly on America's streets today is reflected to some extent in recent polls, which show growing concern about a war in Iraq that lacks broad international support."
Johnson: "And I think the world is not irrelevant. The UN's not irrelevant."
Dawson: "Protest organizers argued the real message of today's rallies is that a silent majority of Americans is uneasy with the prospect of war, like the Green family of Great Neck, New York. To them, the President's case against Saddam Hussein remains unconvincing."
Green, standing next to a woman and two pre-teen girls: "It's the wrong time to go to war. It's the wrong war. We're not pacifists by any means, but I think it's a bad decision."
Dawson concluded: "While the New York demonstration was largely peaceful, there were a few tense confrontations between police and protesters and at least 50 arrests. But most listened to the singers and the speeches, content to let their presence here send a message that at least a part of America isn't ready for war. Pat Dawson, NBC News, New York."

-- CNN and its "Voices of Dissent." During the 12-2pm EST show, anchor Martin Savidge asked Richard Quest in London: "Who organized the demonstration? And who makes up most of the crowd? Is it young people, is it middle-aged, older, give us an idea?"
Quest: "That's been the interesting part about this. The organizers were -- there were three umbrella groups, Campaign for Nuclear Disarmament, the Muslim Alliance and the Stop the War Coalition. And whenever you come to one of these major events, you look to see who is doing the marching. Is it, as the police would say, the usual suspects? Students, those sort of people. But no, this wasn't. This had a full cross-spectrum of the population. The elderly, the young, the students, and particularly what you're looking for in this demonstration was, putting it bluntly, the middle classes, the well-heeled."

Savidge posed the same question to Maria Hinojosa in New York:
"Can you give us an idea of who is in this crowd? What ages, perhaps what background, what walk of life?"
Hinojosa championed the supposed diversity: "You know, Marty, I have to tell you, it's an extraordinary -- like New York, it's an extraordinarily diverse crowd. I have seen elderly men and women with mink coats carrying their posters. I have also seen children with their parents coming from public schools. I saw a sign with someone from the PTA of a public school. I have seen people who called themselves hippies. I have seen old anti-war folks who say that they have been coming to demonstrations since the 1960s, as well as high school students and college students who have never taken part in any demonstration who are now becoming part of the activity here."

The 10pm EST CNN Saturday Night program led with protest stories from New York City, Sydney and Berlin. Anchor Carol Lin inquired of Matthew Chance in Berlin: "Did you see the same mix of people that we've been hearing about in New York, L.A., in Australia right now, middle class, professionals, people who normally you wouldn't expect to find at an anti-war demonstration?"
Chance confirmed: "Absolutely, I mean, the people who are coming out today aren't the kind of, you know, generally the kind of radicals you might normally expect to see at anti-war marches. They're bankers, they're office clerks, they're just normal people coming to show and to say that they are not convinced at this stage that a justifiable case has been made by the United States and the countries supporting it, like Britain, for a war against Iraq."

At about 10:30pm EST Lin pressed historian Douglas Brinkley about the impact of the protests: "When you take a look at the diversity out there, I mean, you had soccer moms out there, professional people, people who have never really participated in mass -- in political rallies. And yet, they felt so strongly about coming out and being heard. Do you think that's an important political factor that the President needs to consider?"
Brinkley: "I think he considers it, but he's looking at his ratings, and so is Karl Rove. And as long as he's in the 60 percent before war, I think he assumes that people will rally around the flag and he'll see himself at 75 or 80 percent...."

On National Review Online's "The Corner," in an item picked up on Monday by Greg Pierce's "Inside Politics" column in the Washington Times and by Brit Hume on his FNC show, Rod Dreher offered this nugget on Saturday about the true nature of some of the protesters:
"So I had to be on the streets around Grand Central late this afternoon, as the demonstration was breaking up. Now, I grant that there are morally serious people against the war. I just didn't see any of them today. This is what I saw: a child whose parents hung a poster around her neck that read: MORE CANDY AND ICE CREAM/LESS WAR AND BIGOTRY. I'm not making that up. I also saw this slogan on a poster: THE IRAQI PEOPLE NEED OUR LOVE, NOT OUR BOMBS. Ooh yeah, and mean people suck.
"I also saw a woman carrying a poster that had an image of President Bush with a Hitler mustache drawn on. I nearly lost it over that. What kind of decent person would have anything to do with a movement that likened the President of the United States to a genocidal mass murderer?..." See:http://www.nationalreview.com/thecorner/corner.asp

NRO also linked to a left coast Web site with photos of the protest in San Francisco, including a picture of Bush as Hitler with blood for a mustache and a sign proclaiming: "Defend Cuba and North Korea against imperialist attack." Check:
http://www.right-thinking.com/comments.php?id=P508_0_1_0

The New York Times on Sunday matched the tone of the networks. "Wide Range of Ages, Races and Parties Unite on Iraq," proclaimed the February 16 headline over a series of dispatches from protest cities, starting with London.

The Times headlined the summary from Paris: "Throwing a Party With a Purpose." Over the dispatch from Rome: "A Festive Tone, But Somber Ideas."

Craig Smith began his piece from Paris:
"It was a party a hundred thousand strong, flowing haltingly below the slated mansard roofs of Paris's stately avenues, accompanied by balloons and banners and vendors selling foot-long hot dogs and fries. If there is one thing the French know how to do, it is how to conduct a demonstration.
"Ladies in stiletto heels and fur-fringed jackets, fathers pushing strollers trailing McDonald's balloons, drably dressed union members, students in face paint and carnival clothes - all turned out to make some noise. Yet despite the gay atmosphere beneath a brilliant blue sky, the message was stark, even dark.
"'The United States is a barbarian country,' shouted some. 'Bush, let's murder,' shouted others. One group chanted, 'Bush, Blair, Sharon, Putin, Chirac: Justice in Palestine, don't touch Iraq.'"...

The Institute for Policy Studies is a far-left, Washington, DC-based outfit, but on Friday morning its anti-liberation of Iraq expert on the subject went unlabeled by both CBS News and CNN.

When Phyllis Bennis of IPS appeared on Friday's The Early Show with Susan Sarandon to publicize the weekend's protest marches, Harry Smith, MRC analyst Brian Boyd noticed, identified Bennis simply as a "foreign policy expert."

A bit later on CNN, Maria Hinojosa set up a segment: "Joining me to talk about why they are anti-war activists are Phyllis Bennis, who is with the Institute for Policy Studies, and a Middle East expert, and Susan
Sarandon."

Smith introduced the 7:30am half hour segment on the February 14 Early Show: "It is being billed as one of the largest anti-war protests ever. This weekend millions of demonstrators are expected to hit the streets worldwide to voice their protest against a possible war with Iraq. United for Peace and Justice is a coalition organizing the rallies here in the United States. Actress Susan Sarandon and foreign policy expert Phyllis Bennis are here to tell us more about it."

A bit later, on CNN's American Morning, Maria Hinojosa handled the remote interview: "We're here inside a union building on 42nd Street, and this has become the headquarters of what they say is an international movement to stop a possible war in Iraq. The organization is called United for Peace and Justice, and joining me to talk about why they are anti-war activists are Phyllis Bennis, who is with the Institute for Policy Studies, and a Middle East expert, and Susan
Sarandon..."

Hinojosa's first "question" to Sarandon: "Susan, there might be some people who say that they might not agree with this war, but they don't necessarily want to take to the streets, because they're worried about seeing -- being seen as unpatriotic. Why, as an American citizen, do you think it's important to stand out and step up now?"

In the midst of a generally laudatory review of former President Reagan's tenure in office aired to mark President's Day, on Monday's Today, MRC analyst Geoffrey Dickens noticed, Katie Couric passed along the standard liberal canard about how Reagan's tax cuts and military spending caused the deficit to grow.

Without mentioning how non-defense spending grew much faster than inflation during the 1980s, to say nothing about how tax revenue growth exceeded the inflation rate, Couric asserted: "During his tenure the economy improved but budget deficits grew as he cut taxes and increased defense spending."

She began her February 17 piece on a more positive note: "On this Presidents Day we wrap up our special series on the Commanders-in-Chief with Ronald Reagan. He was the 40th President of the United States and led what many called the Reagan Revolution. A two-term presidency he hoped would be remembered as a great rediscovery of American values."

A nice shot at the Fox News Channel from Keith Olbermann, the former MSNBC host who has filled in for Paul Harvey on ABC Radio, been a commentator on CNN's NewsNight, and is set to co-host the 2004 summer Olympics on NBC.

On Monday, Olbermann filled in as host of MSNBC's 5pm EST Nachman and during a discussion of reality TV shows, MRC analyst Brad Wilmouth observed, Olbermann told Tom Jicha of the South Florida Sun-Sentinel:
"We always talk about the dumbing down of TV, but why? I mean, I enjoy as much as the next guy the experience of watching somebody humiliate himself or herself on television without really realizing it. I mean, that's why we have the Fox News Channel."

Speaking of humiliation, let's not forget this classic insult from Olbermann on the August 18, 1998 edition of MSNBC's The Big Show in a "question" to then-Chicago Tribune Washington Bureau Chief James Warren:
"Can Ken Starr ignore the apparent breadth of the sympathetic response to the President's speech? Facially, it finally dawned on me that the person Ken Starr has reminded me of facially all this time was Heinrich Himmler, including the glasses. If he now pursues the President of the United States, who, however flawed his apology was, came out and invoked God, family, his daughter, a political conspiracy and everything but the kitchen sink, would not there be some sort of comparison to a persecutor as opposed to a prosecutor for Mr. Starr?"

Now that's an embarrassing supposition to be humiliated about. -- Brent Baker

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